Which can be
previewed via
the link below the following Centretruths
editorial:-

Stemming in large
measure from The Free Testament of a Bound Genius (2003), this
title,
which puns 'revolutionary', restates in greater detail many of the
principal
contentions of John O'Loughlin's recent
philosophy and
arrives at some new conclusions which render it all the more logically
unassailable
and entitled to be regarded as the criterion by which not only
contemporary morality,
but the distinction between morality and immorality, the light and the
dark, should be
judged, even if this does mean that some of one's treasured illusions
should
ultimately be discarded, in order that the light of truth may shine
through in
as unimpeded and unequivocal a way as possible.Frankly, Mr O'Loughlin had no idea,
when he
tentatively began this title, that it would blossom into what is
unquestionably
the most eloquent and comprehensively exacting presentation of his
philosophy
thus far, a presentation that has the right, over and above adjectival
conventions,
to be called 'revelationary' in that much
of what it reveals
is so compellingly cogent as to be positively divine, the divine
revelations of a thinker
who knows the difference
between God and the Devil but does not make the reductionist
mistake of conceiving of history, much less life, as a struggle between
Good
and Evil when all the philosophical evidence points to the conclusion
that good
[the lower case is intentional] is merely the relative counterpart of
Evil and
no more than a just retort to something which, epitomizing vanity, is
not
merely antithetical to anything godly, but the principal obstacle to
the
salvation of the sinful to that which, gracefully transcending the
world, is as
far removed from any such struggleas it is possible to
imagine. Yet
not, on that account, indifferent to the plight of the meek! - A Centretruths editorial.